Nigerian military personnel can be found on
active deployment in no fewer than 30 states of the federation.
Tackling
internal security threats that ordinarily should have been left to the police
and paramilitary agencies to contain, a report said Wednesday.
SBM Intelligence, a strategic intelligence
analysis firm, said the situation had taken an appalling toll on the overall
capacity of the military, and explained the frequent clashes between soldiers
and civilians.
The report also says that Nigeria has one of
the lowest military-to-civilian ratio of nine personnel to every 10,000 people,
a situation it said was alarming for the country’s security framework.
“The military involvement in security of
almost every state in the country speaks to the sorry state of our policing and
a failure of intelligence services,” the report said.
“Police reforms are
overdue and the APC government must now make good its promise to devolve
policing to the local level.”
According to the report, Abia, Anambra,
Bauchi, Edo, Imo, Kano, Kogi, Kwara, Osun, Oyo represented states “in which the
military has been deployed to deal with organised crime”.
Akwa Ibom, Bayelsa, Benue, Cross River,
Delta, Enugu, Gombe, Kaduna, Lagos, Nasarawa, Niger, Ogun, Ondo, Plateau,
Rivers, Taraba and Zamfara represented states “in which the military has been
deployed against a non-state actor which actively takes Nigerian lives or
destroys government and private property”.
Adamawa, Borno and Yobe were said to be the
states “in which the military deployed and in an ongoing battle to reclaim
Nigerian territory or pacify reclaimed territory”.
Military personnel have not been deployed to
Ebonyi, FCT, Jigawa, Katsina, Kebbi and Sokoto in a security capacity within
the last six months.
The report urged the government to make more
use of intelligence than force in dealing with crises.
“Intelligence needs to be more surgical in
its execution so that the security issues that require force to correct are
rather prevented or arrested before they escalate,” it said.
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